Louisiana’s Gulf Hypoxia Problem 2013 Doug Daigle Coordinator, La Hypoxia Working Group, Lower MS River Sub-basin Committee August 6, 2013
Feb 09, 2016
Louisiana’s Gulf Hypoxia Problem 2013
Doug DaigleCoordinator, La Hypoxia Working Group,
Lower MS River Sub-basin CommitteeAugust 6, 2013
LMRSBC & LHWG
• Both formed in 2003 to help implement the 2001 Action Plan at the state and sub-basin level
• “By Summer 2001, States and Tribes in the Basin, in consultation with the Task Force, will establish sub-basin committees to coordinate implementation of the Action
• Plan by major sub-basins, including coordination among smaller watersheds, Tribes, and States in each of those sub-basins”
•Mid-summer shelfwide cruise•Monthly samples along line C•Bimonthly samples along line F•Deployed oxygen meters
28N 28N
FC
**
Source: N. Rabalais, LUMCON
Nutrients, Increased Growth, Low OxygenNutrients, Increased Growth, Low Oxygen
Time Magazine
Brown Shrimp • Fisheries resources at risk• Altered migration• Reduced habitat• Changes in food resources• Susceptibility of early life stages• Growth & reproduction
The Consequences
The future of the fishery ultimately depends on the health of the resource
The Gulf of Mexico has one of the last productive wild coastal fisheries
left in the continental U.S.
Action Plan for Reducing Hypoxia in the Northern Gulf of Mexico (2001, 2008)
• The Action Plan represents the national policy response to the problem of Gulf Hypoxia
• Its specific goal remains reduction of the average annual size of the hypoxic zone to 5000 square kilometers (@ 1,900 square miles)
• The underlying goal is to protect the resource of the Gulf fishery before negative impacts are seen on the system
2008 Action Plan Highlighted State Nutrient Reduction Strategies
• 2001 Plan had Sub-basin Committees forming nutrient reduction strategies – efforts at this through 2007 (http://epa.gov/gmpo/lmrsbc/pdf/lmrsb-nutrient-reduction-strategies.pdf)
• 2008 Action Plan: • Complete and implement comprehensive nitrogen and
phosphorus reduction strategies for states within the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin encompassing watersheds with significant contributions of nitrogen and phosphorus to the surface waters of the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin, and ultimately to the Gulf of Mexico.
Nutrient Yields from the Mississippi BasinNutrient Yields from the Mississippi Basin
Alexander et al. 2008
Louisiana Nutrient Reduction Strategies
•Non-Point Source solutions:•Agriculture BMPs and Watershed Management Plans
•LDEQ/EPA nonpoint source program•USDA Mississippi River Basin Initiative•LSU Master Farmer Program
•Urban storm water and septic tanks•LDEQ/EPA nonpoint source program•Parish programs and ordinances
•Point Source solutions:•Industrial discharges & Municipal discharges
•Environmental Leadership Program Nutrient Reduction Committee•Environmental permitting
•Coastal Restoration solutions:
•River Diversions (river and sediment diversions)•Carbon & Water Nutrient Trading programs
Louisiana’s Nutrient Reduction Strategy
Take Away Points
• Nutrients in the river should be reduced under any scenario
• The strategy since 2001 is supposed to be act now rather than waiting for large-scale impacts on the fishery
• Shrimpers, fishermen, etc. have to engage on this issue to ensure their resource gets protected
Take Away Points, continued
• As one example, the federal government (NOAA) is cutting funding for the annual cruise that maps the Gulf Hypoxic Zone
• We can’t show progress or lack of progress without the science – unless we wait for catch numbers to go down